31

My most intense day as a dev was when we had a product announcement day (with 70 engineers from dozens of companies invited) and the night before the app still didn't run all of the way through.

My team and I worked all night and had our first successful run-through at 10am when the announcement presentation and demo was at 1pm. All I can say is that I didn't breath when that demo was running live... But it worked flawlessly.

After that experience I realized that I had enough of non-tech management setting unrealistic deadlines, quit that job, and am now helping to build a startup. It has been so much more fulfilling and now I set the deadlines. 😎

Comments
  • 3
    I agree totally. If you're doing the work you set the deadline.
  • 3
    Brave switch you made there, congratulations!
    BTW what is your startup about?
  • 1
    Great to hear, best luck at your startup man
  • 3
    @vertti the startup builds machine learning solutions for various industries. We have customers from a professional sports team to large industrial companies.
  • 1
    Sounds challenging and cool! What languages are you primarily using for machine learning at your startup?

    I'm also building up my startup but sounds like you're way ahead of me as you already got paying customers 👍
  • 0
    @vertti we use R for most machine learning, but use Node and hapijs for orchestration.

    The customer part is tough, but my advice is that you have to watch the pulse of the customer and be willing to pivot. We've pivoted a few times.
  • 2
    Ok cool, I got a friend doing R and I'm thinking about picking up some (more) Elixir and try some simple machine learning stuff with it

    Thanks for the feedback regarding customers. Although what I do is just try to get users, I don't expect any revenue anytime soon, if ever. 😅
    However, what you said about pivoting applies just as much regardless
Add Comment